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KurdistanObserver.com
Welcome to Kurdistan
(while it lasts)
Independent/ Nov 23, 2003
Iraq's Kurds want full independence from Baghdad and all the
trappings of statehood, but as Charles Glass reports from Irbil, their political
leaders know that civil war and tragedy would be the inevitable consequence
know the only way to avoid a civil war is to embrace a a form of federalism
23 November 2004
In a small government office on the edge of the
Iraqi Kurdish capital, three oil paintings show better than words what is
driving Iraq towards separation. The first is a dark circle of old men in
traditional Kurdish costumes seated on the ground. The others depict two stages
in the last great Kurdish tragedy. Refugees trudge a serpent's path through the
mountains in one, and the same refugees sit forlornly beside open tents in the
other.
Mohammed Ihsan, who is 38 and took his
doctorate in law from the University of London, tells visitors what the pictures
mean. "He is teaching them to be Kurds," Ihsan says of a man smoking a cigarette
in the first portrait. "He" is Mullah Moustafa Barzani, the father of modern
Kurdish nationalism who died a defeated warrior in Washington in 1979.
The next two in the triptych depict the escape
and arrival of 1991, when the Kurds having rallied to the Americans who
instigated and betrayed their revolution fled over the border to Turkey and
Iran. Ihsan knows about the flight of 1991. He was part of it. "It was a good
thing," he says of a time when thousands of Kurds died. "It united us." The
fourth and fifth panels the present and future have yet to be painted.
Iraqi Kurdistan today might be represented by
peasants rebuilding the villages that Saddam Hussein destroyed, towns governed
by Kurds rather than Arab appointees from Baghdad or Kurds picnicking under
their own flag. What would the artist see in the future: an independent state, a
province within a federal Iraq or another flight to the mountains? The Kurds
fear chaos in the USbacked, interim-governed Arab Iraq is spreading north. Some
Kurds would welcome this as the excuse to secede from Iraq and declare the
Kurdish independence most want. Others, mainly in the leadership, believe
secession would lead to a permanent state of war with the Arab south and,
eventually, the loss of all their gains since 1991.
Dr Mohammed Ihsan is minister for human rights
in the two north-western Kurdish provinces governed by the Kurdistan Democratic
Party (KDP), headed by Massoud Barzani, son of the legendary Mullah Moustafa.
The third Kurdish province, Suleimania, is under the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan (PUK), whose leader is Jalal Talabani. Mr Barzani and Mr Talabani have
agreed to unite their Kurdish administrations after the January elections, if
there are elections.
Both Kurdish zones have human rights
ministries, whose officials have full access to jails and prisons, promote
women's and children's rights and preach civil rights in schools. Human rights
have become paramount to a people whose basic right that to life was abused
for 30 years by Baghdad with the complicity of the Kurds' American and British
allies. Ministries of human rights do not figure in the Arab world or in the
other two states where Kurds live in large numbers, Turkey and Iran. Whatever
happens in the rest of Iraq, the Kurds are determined never to return to horrors
of the past, even under fellow Kurds.
"Welcome to Kurdistan of Iraq" says the banner
over the bridge from Turkey. It would be easier for the Kurds to erase "of Iraq"
than to paint out Kurdistan. "Iraq means nothing to me," Dr Ihsan says. "I am
not proud of Iraq." Kurds would fight and die for Kurdistan; but they would
desert the army as many did in the eight-year Iran-Iraq war rather than die
for Iraq. Even in Mosul, where they are fighting Arab insurgents, they say their
goal is to protect Kurdish neighbourhoods and Erbil, which is less than an
hour's drive away.
Hiro Talabani, the wife of the PUK leader
Jalal, says that people cannot forget what the Arab armies of Saddam Hussein
and his predecessors did to the Kurds. "But, believe me," she adds, "we will
go through it again, if our future goes back to our Arab brothers. There is a
little Saddam in the mind of every one of them."
Nowhere is the divergence between the Kurdish
leadership and the populace so evident as over the issue of independence.
Kurdish leaders have drawn red lines, minimum demands to guarantee their
self-government within Iraq and to prove to their electorate that autonomy is
almost as good as full independence.
No stable Arab government in Baghdad not that
one is emerging would accept the Kurds' conditions for remaining part of Iraq.
The first Kurdish demand is for control of the oil city of Kirkuk, whose Kurdish
majority was reduced or eliminated. The Arabisation programme, an Arab version
of Zionist land confiscation, dispossessed Kurds and replaced them with Arab
Shia settlers. All Kurds say Saddam's ethnic cleansing must be reversed, the
Shia compensated and sent back to the south and Kirkuk incorporated into the
Kurdish administrative area.
Another red line means reversing Saddam's
provincial boundary changes that merged parts of Kurdish provinces into Arab
governorates. Restoring the pre-Saddam boundaries would add as much as 25 per
cent to the existing Kurdish zone above the Green Line that they have controlled
since 1991. It would also give the Kurds significant mineral wealth.
Another red line has been drawn around the
Iraqi armed forces: no Iraqi army may enter the Kurdish zone without the
approval of the Kurdish parliament. A whole generation here and the young are
a majority has never seen an Arab soldier or policeman. Those old enough to
remember would be more adamant in preventing their return.
Some of these demands were incorporated into
the Transitional Administrative Law the Kurds signed with Baghdad on 8 March
this year. Kurdish autonomy is hovering perilously close to independence. The
Arabs, weaker than the Kurds at present, are unlikely to accept Kurdish dictates
forever.
The Arabs see the Kurds, whom they used to
dismiss as illiterate mountaineers, taking too much. The Kurds themselves see
their leaders giving away their freedom. Mr Barzani and Mr Talabani must be
sensitive to their own people, who elected their parties in 1992. "There is
public opinion here," says the KDP minister of state Falah Moustafa Bakir in
Erbil. "It does not want Kurds to make concessions."
Two million of the four million Kurds living in
the Kurdish regional government zone signed a petition demanding a referendum on
independence. A recent opinion survey, in the independent weekly Hawaliti
(Citizen), showed 44 per cent would vote against the two ruling parties, the KDP
and PUK, in regional parliamentary elections.
One reason is the perception that the parties
are conceding too much to Baghdad. Nowhere is this more evident than in the
Kurdish official acquiescence to Baghdad's demand that nothing be done to return
Kirkuk's Kurdish former residents to their homes. Thousands of these internally
displaced people went back to Kirkuk, to live in shanty towns. Some are in
hovels in the local football stadium, including the confines of the men's
lavatories. Most of them say they cannot live much longer without running water,
electricity, clinics, jobs or schools.
Kurdish leaders may be leaving the status quo
in Kirkuk to make a success of federal Iraq, but it is a federal state their
followers do not want. Most Kurds are uneasy about committing Kurdish peshmergas
(guerrilla fighters) to the federal army and the Iraqi National Guard. The
deputy commander of the PUK's peshmergas, Moustafa Sayed Kadir, told me of plans
to transfer 32,000 peshmergas from the PUK and KDP to the Baghdad government.
"They will serve inside and outside Kurdistan," he said.
When I suggested that large numbers of Kurdish
peshmergas fighting in Arab areas would provoke Arab hostility, he agreed,
"You're right. It's crazy to send 10,000 peshmergas to Arab Iraq. I don't want
Arab soldiers here or peshmergas there. We have no choice. This is the tax we
pay as a result of our Iraqi-ness."
The gravest danger of asking peshmergas to
fight for the US in Iraq is to the estimated two million Kurds who live outside
the Kurdish zone. "Arabs are starting to see the Kurds as they see the
Israelis," says the law professor Nouri Talabany, who heads the Kurdish election
commission. And the insurgents have accused the Kurds who had Israeli help for
their rebellions in the late 1960s and early 1970s of working with Israeli
agents in Iraq.
Mr Barzani and Mr Talabani deny the charge,
saying they need no Israeli help. Extremist mullahs have called on followers to
kill Kurds because of the Kurdish alliance with the Americans. Many Kurds have
been killed in Baghdad, Mosul and other cities because they are Kurds. Hundreds
of Kurdish and Christian families have fled the Arab areas for security within
the Kurdish protectorate. This trickle is a momentary function of insecurity
under the US and the Iraqi interim government, or it is the start of a massive
population transfer. "We are a different nation," the KDP chief, Massoud
Barzani, says. "Kurds are not Arabs. We happen to live in a place called Iraq.
Federalism gives us the right to control our areas. The time is past for the
centre to control Kurdistan. We are giving up many of our rights to live in a
united Iraq. They are not giving up anything."
Iraq is in fact, if not in law, two countries.
Kurds refer to their area as Kurdistan and the rest as "Iraq". If the insurgents
win and the Americans leave, the Arabs may try to punish the Kurds for their
"betrayal" of Iraq by having become America's Gurkhas.
One day, while I was with a Kurdish government
minister, a call came from a minister in the Baghdad government. The Kurdish
minister became angry and told him: "Your authority stops at Baquba." Baquba is
a town just south of the Green Line between Kurdish and Arab Iraq.
If Baghdad tries to extend its authority north
of Baquba, there will be one more war to add to the others that erupted when the
US and Britain invaded. Then, the artist can complete his series in harsh shades
of charcoal.
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